Focus & Deep Work
Reclaiming Focus After a Year of Constant Interruptions
If interruptions have shredded your attention span, here's a gradual retraining plan to rebuild sustained focus over a few weeks, step by step.
Focus & Deep Work
If interruptions have shredded your attention span, here's a gradual retraining plan to rebuild sustained focus over a few weeks, step by step.
There is a particular kind of exhaustion that comes not from working too hard, but from never quite working at all. You sit down to write a report, and forty minutes later you have answered six messages, checked two dashboards, refilled your water, and written one sentence. If a year of that has left you feeling like your attention span is a frayed rope, you are not broken and you are not alone. What follows is the retraining plan I have used with myself and recommended to dozens of readers who wrote in with the same complaint.
It helps to understand what happened before you try to fix it. Constant interruption does not just cost you the seconds spent switching tasks. The bigger tax is what researchers loosely call the "resumption cost" — the time and mental effort it takes to reload the thing you were doing back into your head after you leave it.
When interruptions are rare, you pay that cost occasionally and move on. When they arrive every few minutes, something more corrosive happens: you stop fully loading context in the first place, because part of you knows you will be yanked away before you can use it. You start skimming your own work. You keep everything shallow because shallow is cheaper to abandon.
That is the state most people are in after a rough year. The good news is that it is a habit of shallowness, not a permanent loss of capacity. Habits can be retrained. But — and I want to be honest here — it takes weeks, not a weekend, and the progress is not linear.
The instinct is to immediately install a website blocker and declare war on your phone. Resist that for a few days. You cannot fix what you have not seen clearly, and most people are wrong about what actually breaks their focus.
For three ordinary working days, keep a tiny interruption log. It does not need to be elaborate:
After three days, patterns jump out. Almost everyone discovers that two or three sources account for the majority of the damage. For me, years ago, it was email notifications and a specific chat channel — not, as I had assumed, my phone. Knowing the real culprits means you spend your limited willpower where it matters instead of scattering it across everything.
Here is the part people get wrong: they try to go from a shattered attention span straight to a three-hour deep work block, fail within twenty minutes, and conclude they are hopeless. That is like tearing a muscle and then attempting a marathon to prove you have recovered.
Treat focus like the physical capacity it partly is, and progressively overload it.
Over six to eight weeks this quietly compounds. Fifteen minutes becomes forty-five without any single heroic day. The gradualness is the mechanism, not a limitation of it.
This is the least intuitive piece and, in my experience, the most important. A year of constant stimulation does not just fragment your focus — it lowers your tolerance for the small, dull gaps that real work is full of. The moment a task gets boring or hard, an old reflex reaches for something more stimulating.
So the deeper skill is not "focus harder." It is learning to sit inside a dull moment without immediately filling it.
A few ways to practice, in rough order of difficulty:
I will be candid: this feels uncomfortable at first, almost anxious. That discomfort is the reps. It fades faster than you expect — usually within a couple of weeks of consistent practice.
Personal discipline is real but finite, and it is a bad idea to spend it on the same battle a hundred times a day. Once your interruption log has named the top culprits, defang them structurally so you are not deciding in the moment.
The goal of all this is to make the focused choice the default one and the distracting choice mildly inconvenient. You will still get interrupted. You are just no longer volunteering.
Some days will be a mess. You will have a crisis, or sleep badly, or simply lose a morning to nonsense. When that happens, the failure mode is not the bad day — it is deciding the bad day proves the whole project is pointless.
One realistic caveat: if your interruptions are overwhelmingly external — a role where people genuinely need you constantly, or a caregiving situation — no amount of personal retraining fully fixes that. Part of the work then is a conversation about boundaries and expectations, not just self-discipline. Be honest with yourself about which kind of problem you actually have.
Rebuilding focus after a battering year is unglamorous and slow, and that is exactly why it works. Watch yourself honestly for a few days, name the real culprits, then rebuild with short intervals you can actually finish and extend them patiently. Practice tolerating the dull gaps instead of filling them, arrange your environment so the focused choice is the lazy one, and measure the trend across weeks rather than flogging yourself over a single bad afternoon. Do that, and in a couple of months you will notice you have loaded a hard problem fully into your head and stayed with it — quietly, without drama. That is what recovery actually looks like.
Keep reading
A step-by-step ritual for entering deep work quickly and protecting it, even when your week is crammed with meetings, messages, and constant fires.
A clear framework for telling deep work from shallow tasks, so you can protect your best hours and stop treating every task as equally urgent.